Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb base] [pers pn] 'd [verb] [pron] " in BNC.
Previous page Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
31 | ‘ It is n't very high on my list of priorities but I guess I 'd change my mind soon enough if I were to meet the right person . ’ |
32 | On Clinton 's plans to rescue the US economy , the president snarled : ‘ I guess you 'd say his plan really is Elvis economics . |
33 | ‘ First , though , I guess you 'd like something to drink . |
34 | Clues , I guess you 'd call them . ’ |
35 | I guess he 'd want me to , if you asked . |
36 | There may well be there 's a chair there and a chair there there well , I guess he 'd want you to sit there , do n't be tempted to pull the chair when it authority I 'm here , you 're there do with me , let's see how it goes and I trust you . |
37 | And they called in the School Board man because lots of schools in those days were run by boards or erm governors I suppose they 'd call them today . |
38 | Both the old style wing-halves , I suppose they 'd call them mid-field players now , Bobby Moore and now Danny Blanchflower . |
39 | Well I suppose they 'd charge you would n't they ? |
40 | ‘ I suppose you 'd like me to go into purdah ? ’ she enquired scathingly . |
41 | ‘ I suppose you 'd like me to tell you where we found them ? ’ |
42 | ‘ I suppose you 'd like us to walk all the way to Liverpool ? ’ |
43 | " Well I suppose you 'd describe it as … windiness . " |
44 | ‘ But by the time I was eighteen , I realised that , as much as I loved studying the past , my greatest joy came from — well , I suppose you 'd describe it as planning things and watching them grow . ’ |
45 | But er I do n't really remember erm people going out to work much ex except , I suppose you 'd call them the lower classes , or not really the working classes because er , but the lower classes they would take in washing . |
46 | In my view it 's even more interesting than the Soane museum in Lincoln 's Inn Fields ; a perverse neo-classicism I suppose you 'd call it . |
47 | ‘ I suppose you 'd call it that but I did n't look at it that way . |
48 | I suppose you 'd call it ‘ Glorious theft for the sake of the Revolution ’ . |
49 | But that if he wo n't sit there very often Marg , then I suppose I 'd do anything . |
50 | I 'm inclined to ring in half an hour to see you 've got there safely , but I suppose I 'd have your brother hopping out of bed . ’ |
51 | Mine is a sad story , Shelley , but I feel you 'd understand it . ’ |
52 | I should think that happens quite a lot , but I doubt they 'd call themselves The Hell Fire Club . |
53 | ‘ I doubt he 'd think there was much to be proud of . ’ |
54 | ‘ I doubt you 'd get him to do that . ’ |
55 | I bet he 'd speed it up ! |
56 | So when I go you 'd like me to shut it probably would you ? |
57 | ‘ You could try , but I think they 'd find your case more interesting . ’ |
58 | ‘ I think we 'd make ourselves a laughing-stock . ’ |
59 | I think she 'd make my uncle a jolly good wife , and it would be a splendid match for her , would n't it ? |
60 | ‘ Because I think she 'd like us . |